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‘Maverick buildings are those that refuse to bow to fashion or convention and doggedly do their own thing. Over British architectural history the tyrannical hold of taste has frequently served to exclude the unusual or unorthodox, making the buildings that manage to resist the pressure to conform all the more remarkable. Bold, distinctive and often surprising, we call them maverick buildings.’

Six experts were charged with the task of winning an audience over in favour of their chosen building.

Chris Costelloe, Director of The Victorian Society spoke about the Army & Navy Hotel in Westminster by F.T. Pilkington. He lamented the fact that the building had been demolished in 1974, arguing that there “was nothing remotely like it in the country.” The building, he said, combined many different styles of proportion, being a playful and mischievous way to create “overwhelming massiveness”.

He suggested that it refused to be bound by conventional rules and was the result of a country moving into the forefront of world architecture, and that “sometimes the very best things in life teeter right on the very edge of being revolting.”

Artist and architect Adam Nathaniel Furman, presented the case for Terry Farrell’s TV-am building in Camden. Built in 1983, it was, Furman claimed, a building ‘of’ the media, ‘for’ the media and intentionally heralded the palatial cheapness and cheerful exuberance of the privatised breakfast TV of the era.

With its “retro-futuristic classical archway and famous plastic egg cups” it was proof that architecture could be fun, fashionable and frivolous. Its maverick credentials were exemplified, Furman said, by the intentionally wild contrast between elements, the result of having separate design teams competing against each other. It was a “rapturous celebration of its contents…never with the same vivacious clarity has the hyperreal world been captured.”

Emily Gee, of Historic England, argued in favour of A la Ronde, built in Exmouth in the 1790s by two spinster cousins Jane and Mary Parminter. With a design supposedly based on the Basilica of San Vitale, it consisted of 20 rooms each radiating out from a 10-metre high octagonal hallway which allowed the cousins to amble around the house following the course of the sun.

What is remarkable about the building, Gee said, was its decorative handicraft features – feather ceilings, exquisite shell grotto, chevron-green wallpaper, and so on. Although the precise architect is unknown, Gee claimed that it was clearly an invention of the women who had been inspired by their decade-long ‘Grand Tour’ of Europe, and that it was “anything but quaint”.

Dave Daye’s was one of 13 families who were offered the chance to build their own house, and as such remained a powerful example of “bottom-up community empowerment”, influencing and emboldening the lives of the inhabitants.

Andrea Klettner, journalist and architecture PR, made the case for the House in the Clouds in Thorpeness, Suffolk. Built in 1923 as a watertower, it was designed to disguise itself by conforming to the surrounding area’s mock-Tudor and Jacobean style. At nearly 70-feet high, the building appears “like a treehouse floating in the air”. Klettner also made the point that it was perhaps the only watertower to have been hit by RAF gunfire by mistake during the Second World War.

She concluded by saying that the building, now a holiday home, was the only one of the shortlist that was “mad, unorthodox and really quite fun”.

Hugh Pearman, editor of the RIBA Journal, spoke about the Hilda Besse building, St. Anthony’s College, Oxford, built in the late-1960s by Howell Killick Partridge & Amis. He argued that it represented the architects’ jettisoning of convention in favour of architecture that got “odder and odder without explanation”. Almost exclusively a building of precast components, with ‘erupting skin’ and diagrid dining roomceiling, he conceded that this was “not a building done with economy of means in mind”.

Pearman said that this was “precast notions taken to fetishistic extremes”, proof that Brutalism could also be “delicate”, and concluded that they were maverick by designing such a building not for any real reason but “simply because they could”.

After the audience cast their votes in was announced that the winner, by a close margin, was Terry Farrell’s TV-am building.

For more information about the Royal Academy’s exhibitions and events, see their site.